Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Future of public lands around Chaco a concern

- By SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. — The federal government is planning an expanded review of public lands management in northweste­rn New Mexico to address concerns about oil and gas developmen­t surroundin­g Chaco Culture National Historical Park.

A UNESCO World Heritage site, Chaco includes the remnants of an ancient civilizati­on whose monumental architectu­re and cultural influences have been a source of mystery for years.

Native American groups, archaeolog­ists and environmen­talists have been pushing for years for the Bureau of Land Management to consider the historical and cultural significan­ce of the area as it develops a new resource management plan for the San Juan Basin, one of the largest natural gas fields in the nation.

For more than a year, all new leasing within a 10-mile radius of Chaco park has been deferred pending the completion of an updated plan.

U.S. Deputy Interior Secretary Mike Connor said last week that the agency and the Bureau of Indian Affairs’ Navajo Regional Office are joining forces to take a closer look at management across federal and tribal lands throughout the region. This will mark the first joint review for the two agencies.

Connor said he listened to concerns about developmen­t during a visit he and U.S. Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M., made to Chaco last year. The review is a demonstrat­ion of the federal government’s “commitment to ensuring that the region’s rich cultural and archaeolog­ical resources are protected,” he said in a statement.

Udall on Thursday described Chaco park as a cultural destinatio­n that is important not only to the region but the entire state.

Environmen­talists the move.

The Bureau of Land Management started the update of its resource also praised management plan in 2014. The plan guides developmen­t activities on public lands.

The San Juan Basin, which stretches into southern Colorado, has had gas production for more than 60 years. More developmen­t is expected in some areas because technology is making it easier for energy companies to tap the region’s oil resources.

Wally Drangmeist­er, a spokesman for the New Mexico Oil and Gas Associatio­n, said the industry thinks it can continue operating in the area surroundin­g Chaco Canyon in a way that protects what he called a priceless archaeolog­ical site.

“For the past several years, the Chaco Canyon site has been used as a rallying point by out-of-state groups opposed to any further oil and gas developmen­t without taking into account the actual protection­s already in place or the wide range of opinions held by those living near Chaco Canyon,” Drangmeist­er said.

Some archaeolog­ists have theorized that Chaco’s influence spread far and wide from its remote desert location. The park includes a series of great houses, or massive multistory stone buildings, some of which were oriented to solar and lunar directions and offered lines of sight between buildings to allow for communicat­ion.

 ?? JEFF GEISSLER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tourist Chris Farthing from Suffolks County, England, takes a photo of the Chaco Canyon ruins in 2005 while visiting the park in Chaco Canyon, N.M. The federal government is planning an expanded review of public lands management in northweste­rn New...
JEFF GEISSLER/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tourist Chris Farthing from Suffolks County, England, takes a photo of the Chaco Canyon ruins in 2005 while visiting the park in Chaco Canyon, N.M. The federal government is planning an expanded review of public lands management in northweste­rn New...

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